A Practical Rhetoric of Expository ProseOxford University Press, 1966 - Počet stran: 583 |
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Strana 37
... questions as so many doors that open onto a sub- ject . In some cases a question will reveal only a blank wall , in others , a room fully furnished with topics . Notice , too , that frequently these questions interconnect , so that one ...
... questions as so many doors that open onto a sub- ject . In some cases a question will reveal only a blank wall , in others , a room fully furnished with topics . Notice , too , that frequently these questions interconnect , so that one ...
Strana 209
... question . But long , involved questions are frequently awkward and confusing , and Mr. Richards has been wise to split his topic statement into a declaration and a pair of questions about that declaration . In all these cases the ...
... question . But long , involved questions are frequently awkward and confusing , and Mr. Richards has been wise to split his topic statement into a declaration and a pair of questions about that declaration . In all these cases the ...
Strana 433
... QUESTION MARK The question mark ( also known by the name of " query ” and “ interroga- tion point " ) offers more possibilities for error . For one thing it can be used only with a direct question , and ought not to close an indirect ...
... QUESTION MARK The question mark ( also known by the name of " query ” and “ interroga- tion point " ) offers more possibilities for error . For one thing it can be used only with a direct question , and ought not to close an indirect ...
Obsah
Communication and Rhetoric | 3 |
WRITING AS A PROCESS | 17 |
Invention | 32 |
Autorská práva | |
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American become beginning better called cause chapter clause clear closing comma common complete composition consider construction contains course definition diction dictionary discuss effect emphasis employed English especially essay example expression fact feeling final formal give going hand idea important indicate instance kind language least less limited logical look mark matter meaning modifiers nature never noun object opening organization outline paragraph parallel passage pattern phrase position possible problem pronoun prose punctuation question reader reason reference relative repeating requires result rhetoric rhythm rule seems sense sentence short simple single sometimes sound specific statement stress student style subordinate suggest tell term thing third thought tion tone topic transitions true unit usually verb words writer